In 1763, the Dutch ship Amstelveen set sail from the Dutch East Indies for Muscat, Oman. Through a tragic combination of human error and rough seas, the ship never made it to port, sinking off the southern coast of Oman. The thirty surviving crew members then faced a terrible trek across a desolate desert landscape to Muscat. Drawing on the logbook of Cornelis Eyks, the ship's only surviving officer,Klaas Doornbos tells the fascinating story of the men's journey across the Gulf of Oman desert, their encounters with the country's inhabitants, and their struggle to survive.
Quoting extensively from Eyks's logbook, Doornbos describes how the sailors,barefoot and almost naked, walked hundreds of miles in the blazing sun in the hope of reaching civilization. Some of the men died on the way, while the fate of others is uncertain. It was not until 1766 that Eyks and the remaining men reached Muscat.Throughout Doornbos uses Eyks's logbook - the oldest remaining European account of the area - to reveal much about the desert coast of Oman and its people. Equal parts social history, anthropology, and survival chronicle, this gripping account of the Amstelveen's crew is a thrilling piece of naval history.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"Shipwreck and Survival offers a highly readable account of a unique episode in eighteenth-century maritime history. The gripping details of the trek through the desert and Doornbos's personal journey of investigation - from the chance discovery of Eyks's account on an antiques market in southern France to the search for a 250-year old ship wreck via Google Earth - hold broad appeal to a wide readership." - Guido van Meersbergen in Mariner's Mirror
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Verlagsort
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Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 160 mm
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ISBN-13
978-90-8964-838-9 (9789089648389)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Klaas Doornbos (b. 1936) is teacher, researcher, advisor in educational policy, and emeritus professor of special education at the University of Amsterdam.
Prologue 9 The VOC at home and in Asia 13 A mysterious accident 18 The Dutch East Indiaman Amstelveen 21 In the Bay of Sawqirah 34 Two old letters 44 At Cape Mataraca (Ras Madrakah) 49 Forsaken in the desert 55 Along the Gulf of Masirah 59 Hunger, thirst, rocks and robbers 61 Trapped by the Bedouin 65 At a forked river (near Duqm) 66 Saved by some water 69 The fate of the little Javanese boy 72 A warmer welcome 75 Through the high sand dunes 79 Encounters on the Sharqiyah coast 83 A cunning merchant captain in Hadd 89 Arrival in Muscat 92 Unrest in the Arabian merchant fleet 97 With the Resident on Kharg 101 Salt from Bandar Abbasi 104 A surprising reunion in Muscat 106 To Batavia by way of Cochin 110 To Muscat once again 114 Back in Middelburg at last 117 Cornelis Eyks, a life at sea 122 Causes and location of the disaster 129 Those on board and their fate 133 Remaining mysteries 138 'The salvaged people' 141 Acknowledgments 143 Bibliography 145